Sir Kael One-Eye — a warrior whose empty socket, scarred over, was as much a badge of honour as the crest on his shield. His loyalty to House Eichenwald had been
forged in dozens of battles, paid for in blood and oaths.
That single remaining eye now drank in a sight that made his heart
stop dead
, then hammer with fresh, frantic alarm.
*(Randel… why?)
He knew Randel. Not the icy duke from the portraits, but
flesh and blood.
He remembered the fourteen-year-old boy standing over a war map, dismantling the plans of seasoned commanders with a
cold, merciless mind
in the span of a heartbeat.
(That sharpness… it cut like a blade. No hesitation.)
He remembered the sixteen-year-old Randel at the grand tourney — face
calm as a mountain lake
, unseating a celebrated champion with a single, effortless lance strike. Not a bead of sweat, not a hitch in his breath.
(As though he weren’t entirely human.)
Randel had been
perfect
. Ice for a mind, steel for a body.
Women? Gods, yes — an entire army of them. Daughters of dukes, fluttering court ladies, adventuresses trying to cage a falcon. They flung themselves at his flame like moths.
And he was
polite
. Terrifyingly, mortally polite. He could treat a beauty who had shared his bed with the night before with the care due a duchess… and by morning dispatch her to the far side of the continent with the same glacial calm.
(Tears? Hysterics? Mere noise — interference in his calculations.)
Kael’s gaze
darted
now.
The Randel before him was… was
different.
Not a trace of the ducal mask of frost.
A
bone-deep dread
spread through the old knight’s chest, colder than any clash of steel he had ever known.
Randel simply stood there. As though he were a god pronouncing judgment upon the world itself.
“Randel… why?” Kael’s voice
cracked.
Randel did not answer. Only the ghost of a smile curved his lips — a smile that turned the veteran’s heart into a lump of ice.
(Is this truly him?)
But that had been another life.
Now Kael’s eye was fixed on the
boy
the one who stood with his
soul bared
, voice trembling as he begged the golden enigma, “Don’t go.”
Who had clutched her arm with the desperate strength of a
lovestruck page
, not a calculating sovereign.
Who had blushed and stammered apologies like a child caught stealing sweets.
(What in the nine hells is this?)
Inside Kael something
tore apart.
His knuckles went white around the haft of his axe.
(Impostor? Enchantment?)
She hadn’t only drawn the poison from his veins — she had
melted the young duke’s very reason.
Kael had seen the look in Randel’s eyes when he gazed at her.
To Kael she was nothing but a threat.
To Randel there was no fear — only pure, unclouded
hope
. The same hope Randel had spent years ago branded weakness and crushed beneath his heel… now it blazed in his gaze like sunrise.
Kael stepped toward his lord.
Randel still stood, but the
ice of his armour had cracked
. Through the fissure peered something
alive, vulnerable, terrifyingly fragile
.
“Your Grace…” Kael’s voice was
hard as tempered steel.
This story originates from a different website. Ensure the author gets the support they deserve by reading it there.
Randel turned. Exhaustion, pain… and something Kael had never seen before: the stunned wonder of a man who had spoken to a god — and been answered.
“She… accepted, Kael,” Randel whispered, as though afraid the words would shatter. “She is coming to Eichenwald.”
Kael swallowed.
(This is no victory. This is a trap.)
The unshakable, rational duke — the man who played kingdoms like chess — had been
enchanted by an unknown light
and struck a bargain without reading the terms.
A cold, heavy fear settled in the old warrior’s chest.
Not fear of the sorceress.
Fear of what she would
do to his lord.
A ruler who has tasted miracle can never return to cold calculation.
And for the lord of a duchy, miracle was an
unaffordable luxury.
***
The duke’s words hung in the air. A
thick, ringing silence
fell over the company. Only the snap of a twig beneath a boot and the soldiers’ ragged breathing broke it.
Her acceptance brought no relief. It only
seeded
unease through the ranks.
Her power did not obey the laws of war or the code of honour. They had all seen it.
While Randel negotiated, the men had not been idle. On the sergeant’s quiet orders they cleared fallen trees, readied the surviving wagons, prepared the ducal travelling carriage — plain, almost austere, save for the Eichenwald crest on the door.
Their lord lived. And, it seemed, had forged an alliance with something not of this world.
The soldiers stood frozen between awe and dread.
Randel ignored the agony in his shoulder and the stunned stares of his men. He straightened — and in that motion there was a
new, strange majesty
.
He turned to the golden figure and
bowed his head
. Not as an equal. As a vassal offering fealty.
“Please,” he said softly, yet with iron that brooked no refusal.
Beneath the helm Amanda
froze
for a heartbeat. The gesture was too human. Too…
mortal.
Yet silently she laid her gauntleted hand upon his. The touch was feather-light, almost weightless.
Still, through the thin gold Randel felt a faint, unmistakable
tremor.
He led her as one might lead a sacred relic into a cathedral.
The soldiers
parted
, forming a living corridor. Mud-streaked, weary faces wore masks of open astonishment.
“The Ice of Eichenwald,” their unflinching duke, was escorting a being radiating
ancient, merciless power
as though she were the most precious lady in the realm.
There were no whispers. Only heavy, reverent silence.
(As though the forest itself had taken flesh and walked among them.)
Randel
opened the carriage door with his own hand
.
Amanda stepped onto the footboard. He steadied her. For one heartbeat the golden armour
flared
in the dim interior, then the door shut,
sealing her away
from the world.
Randel turned. For the first time that day the old steel returned to his eyes.
“Sir Kael — vanguard. The rest of you — ring around the carriage. No stops. No questions.”
His voice
boomed
, restoring shattered order.
“The lady within is under my personal protection. Under the protection of House Eichenwald. Her safety is now your highest priority. Understood?”
“
YES, YOUR GRACE!”
The disciplined roar briefly drowned the fear.
The duke nodded once, climbed in after her, and closed the door.
The column moved off, wheels groaning over the muddy road, bearing within its heart the most dangerous secret that forest had ever known.
***
Atop the cliff, cloaked in moss and bark-brown, a man lay motionless in ambush.
Narrow, serpentine eyes
absorbed
every detail: the annihilation of the Crimson Claws, the appearance of the golden figure, power that
defied comprehension
, and — against all reason — Duke Randel von Eichenwald alive, unharmed, riding away in his carriage with that…
anomaly
.
He watched her enter the carriage. Watched the reverence in the soldiers’ eyes. Watched the duke’s wounds being tended.
Slowly, without a sound, the man withdrew from the edge and
melted
into the forest depths.
(Mission complete — in the worst way possible.)
His masters in the Empire awaited a report.
An
impossible
report.
The plan to eliminate Randel had failed — not through betrayal or martial cunning, but because of a power that
should not exist.
He vanished as silently as he had come, leaving only the rustle of leaves and an ominous quiet pregnant with coming storm.
The Empire would learn of the “Golden Guardian.”
And the game…
would change forever.